RUMOUR DENIED
NO PRESSURE EXERCISED BY GERMANY. BELGIAN CABINET CALLED. (Received This Day, 11.0 a.m.) BRUSSELS. November 7. > An official spokesman categorically denied rumours that the meeting of King Leopold and Queen Wilhelmina had resulted from a German demand that Belgium should remain neutral if Holland were attacked. The Belgian Cabinet was unexpectedly summoned.
DANISH REPORT DISCUSSION OF WIDE RANGE. SITUATION MOST SERIOUS. (Received This Dav. 10.25 a.m.) COPENHAGEN November, 7. The Amsterdam correspondent of the “Politikcn" states that discussions ranged over the international situation. which is most serious as far as Belgium and •Holland are concerned.
GERMAN COMMENT SUGGESTION TO SMAJ.L POWERS. (Received This Day. 11.0 a.m.) LONDON. November 7. A German Foreign Office spokesman, commenting' on the conference between Queen Wilhelmina and King Leopold after King Leopold’s return to Brussels, declared that small powers must do more than make paper complaints about the British blockade.
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Wairarapa Times-Age, 8 November 1939, Page 5
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147RUMOUR DENIED Wairarapa Times-Age, 8 November 1939, Page 5
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